Articles in 2011

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  • In addition to balancing X-chromosome dosage between males and females via X inactivation, mammals also balance dosage of X chromosomes and autosomes. Allele-specific chromatin immunoprecipitation with deep sequencing (ChIP-seq) analyses now show that the active X chromosome is upregulated at the level of both transcription initiation and elongation.

    • Eda Yildirim
    • Ruslan I Sadreyev
    • Jeannie T Lee
    Article
  • Ribonucleoside monophosphates (rNMPs) are often incorporated into genomic DNA. Misincorporated rNMPs are now shown to be repaired by mismatch repair and RNases H. If not repaired, they can serve as a template for DNA synthesis and can cause mutagenesis in Escherichia coli and yeast.

    • Ying Shen
    • Kyung Duk Koh
    • Francesca Storici
    Article
  • Kinetochores assemble on centromeric DNA and link centromeres to spindle microtubules, thus allowing proper segregation during mitosis. The kinetochore subunit Ndc10 makes contacts with centromeric DNA elements, which are now directly observed in a crystal structure. Along with biochemical analyses, the work indicates that Ndc10 functions as a central organizing hub to assemble the inner kinetochore.

    • Uhn-Soo Cho
    • Stephen C Harrison
    Article
  • Oncogenic activation can generate replicative stress, leading to activation of ATR and Chk1. The hypothesis that these events could be exploited to selectively kill cancer cells is now demonstrated in vivo, using mouse models for cancer development. Myc-driven tumors are shown to be sensitive to ATR deficiency or inhibition of Chk1.

    • Matilde Murga
    • Stefano Campaner
    • Oscar Fernandez-Capetillo
    Article
  • The E3 ubiquitin ligases RNF8 and RNF168 are required for recruitment of tumor surpressor 53BP1 to sites of DNA double-strand breaks. The reasons for this have been unclear, as 53BP1 recognizes histone mark H4K20me2. Now the AAA-ATPase VCP and cofactors are shown to be recruited in a ubiquitination-dependent manner to double-strand break sites, where they remove polycomb protein L3MBTL1 from chromatin.

    • Klara Acs
    • Martijn S Luijsterburg
    • Nico P Dantuma
    Article
  • The surface glycoprotein of the distinct ebolavirus responsible for the largest outbreak yet described (Sudan Gulu) has been crystallized in complex with a novel, neutralizing antibody. The crystal structure and accompanying in vitro and in vivo experiments demonstrate that the antibody functions after virus entry and illustrates a key hotspot for ebolavirus neutralization.

    • João M Dias
    • Ana I Kuehne
    • Erica Ollmann Saphire
    Brief Communication
  • In fission yeast, the DNA damage kinases Tel1 (ATM) and Rad3 (ATR) are required to recruit telomerase to telomere. The relevant target for these kinases is now identified: shelterin subunit Ccq1 is phosphorylated at Thr93 in a Tel1/Rad3-dependent manner, and this modification is essential for Ccq1 to interact with telomerase subunit Est1.

    • Bettina A Moser
    • Ya-Ting Chang
    • Toru M Nakamura
    Article
  • The EGFR receptor tyrosine kinase is frequently mutated in lung cancer, but the mechanism by which mutations activate kinase activity are not clear. Using purified, nearly full-length EGFR, it is now seen that mutations drive activation and resistance to inhibitors through the formation of the asymmetric kinase domain dimer.

    • Zhihong Wang
    • Patti A Longo
    • Philip A Cole
    Article
  • Rnf8 is an E3 ligase involved in the DNA damage response, adding ubiquitin moieties to histones H2A and H2AX at sites of DNA damage. Now Rnf8 is found to modify shelterin subunit Tpp1, and this is important for its stability and retention at telomeres. Cells lacking Rnf8 show telomere shortening and chromosome fusions.

    • Rekha Rai
    • Ju-Mei Li
    • Sandy Chang
    Article
  • Telomerase uses its associated RNA as a template for processive addition of telomeric DNA repeats. Biochemistry and smFRET analysis are now used to investigate how the RNA template moves along the active site, revealing an accordion mechanism whereby the regions flanking the template alternate between extended and compacted forms.

    • Andrea J Berman
    • Benjamin M Akiyama
    • Thomas R Cech
    Article
  • The Fanconi anemia (FA) DNA-repair pathway is important in processing of DNA interstrand cross-links and in resistance to exogenously added aldehyde. Genetic analyses now reveal the synthetic lethality of deficiencies in the FA pathway and formaldehyde catabolism, indicting that this pathway repairs lesions caused by endogenous formaldehyde.

    • Ivan V Rosado
    • Frédéric Langevin
    • Ketan J Patel
    Brief Communication
  • The FET family proteins FUS, EWSR1 and TAF15 are RNA-binding proteins with diverse nuclear functions. PAR-CLIP analyses now reveal the genome-wide RNA targets of all three human FET proteins and of two FUS mutants that cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Although the RNA-binding properties of the mutants remain unchanged, the spectrum of RNA targets is altered because of the changed subcellular localization of the mutants.

    • Jessica I Hoell
    • Erik Larsson
    • Thomas Tuschl
    Brief Communication
  • The RITS complex links the RNAi pathway with centromeric heterochromatin formation in fission yeast and comprises the chromodomain protein Chp1, the GW protein Tas3 and the argonaute protein Ago1. X-ray analysis of the structured core of the Chp1–Tas3 subcomplex reveals the presence of a C-terminal PIN domain in Chp1, which contributes to post-transcriptional gene silencing of subtelomeric transcripts independently of RNAi.

    • Thomas Schalch
    • Godwin Job
    • Leemor Joshua-Tor
    Article
  • NSP and Cas family proteins form multidomain signaling platforms that integrate signals to mediate cell migration and invasion. Structural analyses show that the C-terminal domain of human NSP protein BCAR3 adopts the Cdc25-homology fold of Ras GTPase exchange factors, but in a closed conformation incompatible with enzymatic activity. Instead, this closed conformation is instrumental for interactions with Cas proteins.

    • Peter D Mace
    • Yann Wallez
    • Stefan J Riedl
    Article
  • What happens to histones during transcription is not well understood. Atomic force microscopy snapshots of RNA polymerase II (Pol II)-nucleosome complexes before, during and after transcription show the presence of looped transcriptional intermediates. In addition, a fraction of transcribed histones are remodeled to hexasomes, and the size of this fraction depends on the elongation rate of Pol II.

    • Lacramioara Bintu
    • Marta Kopaczynska
    • Carlos Bustamante
    Article
  • Common fragile sites (CFSs) can drive genomic instability. The basis for their fragile nature is not clear, but lymphocyte CFSs have been mapped to regions with low replication initiation events and late replication completion. These features are now used to rapidly identify CFSs in different fibroblast cells.

    • Benoî Le Tallec
    • Bernard Dutrillaux
    • Michelle Debatisse
    Brief Communication
  • The enzyme Rubisco has a central role in atmospheric CO2 fixation. Rubisco can be inactivated if its sugar substrate is bound prior to carbamylation of a residue in the active site. The structure of tobacco Rca, the enzyme that removes the bound sugar substrate and activates Rubisco, is now presented, offering insight into this process.

    • Mathias Stotz
    • Oliver Mueller-Cajar
    • Manajit Hayer-Hartl
    Article
  • The mechanism by which the noncanonical E1-like enzyme Atg7 activates ubiquitin-like Atg8 to trigger autophagy has not been well understood. The crystal structures of the N-terminal domain of Atg7 alone and C-terminal domain of Atg7 in complex with Atg8 show that this probably proceeds without the need for dramatic conformational rearrangements by Atg7, distinct from other E1 enzymes.

    • Seung Beom Hong
    • Byeong-Won Kim
    • Hyun Kyu Song
    Article